POVERTY levels are rising fast in the South Lakes area, MP Tim Farron has told the House of Commons this afternoon.

Calling on the new Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Amber Rudd to introduce poverty mandatory impact assessments for all new laws, Mr Farron demanded immediate action on what he said was a growing problem.

“There are only 220 people in my constituency registered as unemployed, and there are nearly 2,220 children living below the poverty line which tells us that poverty is far more complex in its causes than we perhaps sometimes think," Mr Farron told the House.

“So, would the Secretary of State consider introducing mandatory poverty impact assessments for all Government policy including those that have an impact specifically on rural communities, including for example issues of excessive transport and housing costs and the likely impact on withdrawing the basic payment system for farmers?”

In response, Ms Rudd said Mr Farron had raised “a number of issues relating to the cost of living” and that she would “come back to him”.

A statement from the MP's office pointed out that 1 in 7 children in South Lakeland are currently living in poverty while the number of people using the local foodbank in Kendal has increased by 16 per cent in the past year.

Speaking afterwards, Mr Farron said: “Kids in our area who return home from school each day to find there's no food on the table deserve much better than the Minister shrugging her shoulders.

"Far too many people are finding themselves in increasingly desperate situations where their only hope is to turn to payday loan companies.

"Clearly there are policy changes that are making life even more difficult for people who live in poverty, and if you're already in that situation then you simply cannot afford even the slightest dip in your income."